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/ 7 November 2006
In June the Teacher published information about two agreements between the Department of Education and teachers’ unions that will affect the salaries of teachers and principals. The response to these articles from you, our readers, has been tremendous.
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/ 7 November 2006
That is the figure that the Global Campaign for Education (GCE), an international coalition of charities and teacher unions, believes is the very minimum necessary to achieve the target — agreed by the United Nations in 2000 as a Millennium Development Goal and reaffirmed at the G8 summit at Gleneagles a year ago — of providing universal free access to primary education by 2015.
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/ 7 November 2006
No special arrangements have been made for Schabir Shaik’s expected detainment at Durban Westville prison, media reports said on Tuesday. Correctional services spokesperson Sukhthi Naidoo as saying: ”He’ll be a prisoner like everyone else and will be treated normally.”
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/ 7 November 2006
Maqoma’s fused South African dance aesthetic draws on his traditional Xhosa roots, blended with township moves and formal Western techniques, writes Andrew Gilder.
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/ 6 November 2006
At an informal, unlicensed bar at a house in a remote corner of Soweto, men and women sip lukewarm beer, mingle, flirt and sometimes dance to driving and monotonous kwaito rhythms. They share a secret. The bar, called a shebeen in the townships, is one of the places where young, black gay people don’t have to hide who they are.
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/ 6 November 2006
A controversial North West company with provincial government housing contracts worth almost R250-million has been implicated in tender irregularities described as "unheard of" by the provincial legislature. One of these contracts, worth R80-million, is for the building of 2Â 000 houses in Taung following floods in March this year.
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/ 6 November 2006
A senior former White House official on Monday predicted that the Republicans would suffer heavy losses in the midterm elections, despite polls showing a cut in the Democratic party’s lead. Former United States deputy secretary of state Richard Armitage predicted that the Democrats would retake the House of Representatives.
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/ 6 November 2006
Output of 55 000 barrels per day of oil was cut in Nigeria when armed protesters on Monday forced the closure of a flow station belonging to Italy’s Agip company in the Niger Delta, an Agip official said. ”There were 48 persons — all local staff — on the flow station when it was invaded by the protesters,” said the official.
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/ 6 November 2006
Brazil, home to the world’s largest rainforest, will ask rich nations to back a plan to help it slow deforestation at global climate talks this week, a senior environmental official said. The plan marks a first step toward including deforestation in global climate agreements to cut emissions of carbon.